My MicroCap Portfolio Experiment – Investing in 16 Canadian Micro-Cap Stocks

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(Note: See my July 2018 Update on Canadian MicroCaps)

I’ve decided to experiment in the Canadian Micro-cap space. Micro-caps are those companies on the TSX and TSX Venture Exchange that trade below $100 million market capitalizations. Out of hundreds of companies, I selected only 16 stocks (see below – do you own any of these stocks too?). I looked for micro companies that can possibly turn into multi-baggers on the foundation of their unique product/service, large addressable market, long runway to grow, exceptional management,  high/steady gross margins, high revenue growth, and in most cases – profitable, cash flow positive, high return on equity (ROE), and return on capital (ROIC) operations.

Check out my MicroCap Portfolio (est. Aug 2017) below – 16 micro cap stocks. I’ll provide updates in the future – hopefully it all works out. I’m well aware that some micro-caps might fail, while others will be average performers, but it’s the 2-3 that possibly turn into multi-baggers that I’m really excited about. Overtime, I’ll invest more capital into the winners, and trim or eliminate the losers, if any decline more than 50%. We’ll see – time will tell. (note – I previously owned 4 micro-cap stocks below – Intrinsync Technologies, Greenspace Brands, Ten Peaks Coffee, and Ceapro, but have now segmented them into my new MicroCap Portoflio).

My Canadian MicroCap Portfolio (est. Aug 2017)

Namsys Inc
Vigil Health Solutions
Pioneering Technology Corp
Vitreous Glass Inc
AirIQ Inc
DMD Digital Health Connections Group Inc
Redishred Capital Corp
Sunora Foods Inc
Bevo Agro Inc
Imaflex Inc
Diamond Estates Wines & Spirits Inc
CVR Medical Corp
Intrinsync Technologies
Greenspace Brands
Ten Peaks Coffee
Ceapro

 

Francois Rochon – The Compounding Machine

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I’ve previously written about Francois Rochon, founder of Giverny Capital, but now I’d like to announce that Francois Rochon has joined the Capital Compounders Club on Facebook (join now!). I met Francois in December, 2016. He’ll be in the sequel to my book – Market Masters. Please join and welcome Francois, the Compounding Machine, to the group!

Francois Rochon founded Giverny Capital (est. 1998), a money management firm located in Montreal (Old Town), QC. Assets Under Management (AUM) are over $500 million. His investment philosophy comes down to “owning outstanding companies for the long term”, which means that Francois selects, and invests in outstanding ‘Capital Compounders’. See a list of Giverny Capital’s 13F holdings on Whale Wisdom: https://whalewisdom.com/filer/giverny-capital-inc….

The Rochon Global Portfolio has achieved a 15.9% annualized rate of return since inception, clearly beating the index. That means $100,000 invested in 1993, with Rochon, would have compounded into over $3,180,000 by the end of 2016. (source: http://www.givernycapital.com/…/Rendements-Rochon-global-en…). Francois is a Compounding Machine.

Here are Francois’ key points on investing, that he re-posted recently in the Giverny Capital 2016 Annual Letter:

  • We believe that over the long run, stocks are the best class of investments.
  • It is futile to predict when it will be the best time to begin buying (or selling) stocks.
  • A stock return will eventually echo the increase in per share intrinsic value of the underlying company (usually linked to the return on equity).
  • We choose companies that have high (and sustainable) margins and high returns on equity, good long term prospects and are managed by brilliant, honest, dedicated and altruistic people.
  • Once a company has been selected for its exceptional qualities, a realistic valuation of its intrinsic value has to be approximately assessed.
  • The stock market is dominated by participants that perceive stocks as casino chips.
  • With that knowledge, we can then sometimes buy great businesses well below their intrinsic values.
  • There can be quite some time before the market recognizes the true value of our companies. But if we’re right on the business, we will eventually be right on the stock.

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DIY Investor Feature: Philippe Bergeron-Bélanger

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When I first started the Capital Compounders Club (https://www.facebook.com/groups/capitalcompoundersclub), I promised to post DIY investing stories on our very own members. My philosophy; the more you learn (from others), the more you earn….

So, first up is club member Philippe Bergeron-Bélanger, who’s been a full time investor since August, 2014. Philippe lives in Montreal (I love that city), and also runs a free investment blog called Espace MicroCaps with Mathieu Martin (another club member) where they both share their top investment ideas and educational articles about microcap investing.

Philippe’s returns have been great; he says his capital has gone up 8x since 2014. And he’s only 30.

I’ve posted below the Q&A style interview with Philippe. There’s lots of great info on micro-cap investing, including Philippe’s micro-cap criteria, current holdings, and his favourite non-mainstream book pick (it’s on my reading list now).

Read on…

DIY Investor Feature – Philippe Bergeron-Bélanger

Age:

30 years old

Occupation:

Full-time investor since August 2014

City:

Montreal

Website/blog/Seeking Alpha Reports:

I run a free investment blog called Espace MicroCaps with Mathieu Martin where we share our top investment ideas and educational articles about microcap investing. We also organize networking events at Bier Markt Montreal with speakers and companies in the space. Our message board has over 300 members and is the only French one in North America with a focus on microcaps.

Short Bio:

I have a background in finance and accounting. Out of university, I started to work at Travelers as a surety underwriter. One of my colleague there introduced me to microcaps and my first two investments went up multiple times my invested capital. Needless to say, I was hooked. In August 2014, I decided to quit my job to become a full-time microcap investor. I never looked back.

Investing Style and Influences:

Interestingly, I have made some money playing poker while studying at university. It taught me the importance of having sound decision-making processes and the discipline to stick to them. It helped me detach myself emotionally from money, and start thinking in terms of risks, rewards and expected returns. As an investor, our goal should be to maximize potential return “per unit of risk”. Some prefer to minimize downside first, think “margin and safety” and then find the best investment opportunities for that say level of risk. Some prefer to focus on potential return only. I’m more a student of the former than the latter. Influences: Ian Cassel (MicroCapClub) and Paul Andreola (Smallcap Discoveries) had the greatest impact on my investing style.

Investing Strategies:

I run a concentrated portfolio of Canadian microcaps. My goal is to find undervalued and undiscovered equities that have the potential to at least double my money on a 3 years timeframe. In a nutshell, I look for mispriced growth stocks because I can make money in two ways: 1) Expansion of valuation multiple and 2) Growing revenues and EPS.

Stock Selection Process:

I look for growth businesses that present the following attributes and/or have the potential to show them in a relatively short timeframe: High gross margins and/or high asset turnover, operating leverage (expanding GM% and EBITDAS%), cash flow positive from operations, positive Working Capital, tight capital structure with minimal to no debt, low dilution risk from options and warrants, high insider ownership (ideally a founder-operated business), low institutional ownership, no analyst coverage, low customer concentration risk, some sort of niche competitive advantages and/or intellectual property, etc. I don’t tend to put a lot of weight on past performance as most microcaps are too early stage or have struggled for years before showing glimpses of hope. If they were solid businesses, they wouldn’t be microcaps after all. In other words, I can get comfortable with only a few quarters of sound financial performance if I pay a reasonable-to-cheap price given the growth potential of the company. Note that I don’t invest in resource or financial companies.

Risk Management:

The best risk-mitigating activity is to do a lot more research than anyone else. You want to get an informational edge on other investors before investing and AFTER. You need to follow your positions closely.

Biggest Wins/Losses:

Wins –

Lite Access Technologies Inc. (LTE.v) – in at 0.25$, still holding

Pioneering Technology Corp (PTE.v) – in at 0.125$, still holding

Biosyent Inc. (RX.v) – in at 1.50$ and sold at 9.50$ in 15 months

Losses –

Ackroo Inc. (AKR.v) – in at an average cost of 0.085$, still holding

MicrobixBiosystems Inc. – in at 0.40$ and sold at 0.22$

Portfolio (Current holdings)

  • Imaflex Inc. (IFX.v)
  • Lite Access Technologies Inc. (LTE.v)
  • Ackroo Inc. (AKR.v)
  • Pioneering Technology Corp (PTE.v)
  • Namsys Inc. (CTZ.v)
  • ImmunoPrecise Antibodies Ltd (IPA.v)
  • Siyata Mobile Inc. (SIM.v)
  • Aurora Solar Technologies Inc. (ACU.v)
  • CovalonTechnologies Ltd. (COV.v)
  • GatekeeperSystems Inc. (GSI.v)
  • RenoWorksSoftware Inc. (RW.v)

Annual Returns:

My TFSA is a good indicator of my past performance. I’ve been investing for 4 years now and my capital has gone up 8x.

Advice and Outlook:

1) Companies that are dominating a niche tend to do better than those chasing large opportunities. They run a profitable business in their niche and can reinvest profits to expand their TAM.

2) Turn off the noise, stop listening to mainstream media and focus on finding companies that should do well in any macro environment. Remember that the price you pay is your margin of safety.

3) Don’t use leverage. If it’s not good for the companies you invest in, it shouldn’t be good for you either.

A great investing book you’ve read that isn’t mainstream:

Insider Buy Superstocks: The Super Laws of How I Turned $46K into $6.8 Million (14,972%) in 28 Months by Jesse Stine

Ryan Irvine and Boyd Group Income Fund; the +4,250% Capital Compounder

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Do you own Boyd Group Income Fund (BYD.UN)? It’s one of the best performing stocks on the S&P/TSX over the past decade. Boyd’s market cap grew from $25 million to $1.8 billion, and today, it is the largest operator of collision repair centres in North America.

Well, someone you’ve probably never heard of – Ryan Irvine, Founder of KeyStone Financial – recommended Boyd “in November 2008 at $2.30/share and today it trades in the $95.00 range (it has paid over $3.00/share in dividends) and returned over 4,250%”. That’s a 40+ bagger! ($1 investment turns into $40+). Peter Lynch would certainly be proud. No doubt – Boyd is an exceptional capital compounder stock. (Btw email me and I’ll send you a free copy of my new book, Capital Compounderswhich includes stocks similar to Boyd Group Income Fund).

That’s why I’m featuring Ryan Irvine in this issue of my newsletter. He’s going to explain “the anatomy of great stock selection”; how he selects capital compounders, walking-through his profitable analysis of Boyd Group Income Fund. Ryan’s based in Vancouver, and has been running KeyStone Financial since 2000. KeyStone is an independent stock market research advisor firm. It’s similar to Peter Hodson’s 5i Research. For the past 17-years, KeyStone has specialized in uncovering, before the broader market, under-followed small-to-mid-sized companies based on the GARP (growth at a reasonable price) approach. KeyStone’s Small Cap Strategy has achieved a whopping 37.2% average annual return since inception.

Consider this issue on Ryan Irvine a “lost” chapter from my book, Market Masters. However, the following three sections below that comprise this issue – “My Investing Journey”, “Small Cap Investing Methodology” and “The Anatomy of Great Stock Selection – Boyd Group Income Fund”, were all written by Ryan who I met in Toronto earlier this year. We found many overlaps in our investing philosophy so I asked him if he’d be interested in sharing his stock-picking principles with all of you. This issue is going to be a longer read than usual but I think you’ll enjoy what Ryan has to say. And if you have any questions for Ryan – email him directly; rirvine@keystocks.com.  Cheers,  Robin.

***
By Ryan Irvine, Founder, KeyStone Financial, August, 2017 – 

My Investing Journey

The journey to create KeyStone Financial and KeyStocks.com started back in high school in a stock picking contest put on by one of my math teachers.

I found the idea of capital markets exciting and while there was plenty of information to be found on the TD’s, Royal Banks, and at the time Nortel’s of the world, what intrigued me were the underdogs, untold stories, or the stocks trading at under $10 or even in the pennies (my price range at the time) that could be the next great company. The ones that could provide the returns that could easily win that contest.

The problem, there was very little information on these types of companies.

With some digging, what you could find were what I later discovered (after they lightened my wallet) were glorified sell side reports written by brokerages that were paid by the companies they were covering through financing fees or worse, puff pieces authored essentially by paid shills for the companies. Most of these were mining exploration companies. The TSX and TSX-Venture are laden with these black holes where capital that should be put to productive use, goes to die. I learned this the hard way and it is one of the primary reasons KeyStone has little coverage in the resource segment in Canada – it is beat to death in this country and most investors are already overexposed. As far as the junior exploration segment, we would not touch it with the proverbial ten-foot pole.

On I went to university (Simon Fraser) to get grounding in financial and security or stock analysis specifically. The education has served me well, but the philosophy taught academia at the time and still today in most institutions surrounds the efficient market hypothesis (EMH). EMH theory basically states it is impossible to “beat the market” because stock market efficiency causes existing share prices to always incorporate and reflect all relevant information.

Many academics blindly take the theory hold, where in my reality I disagree with it strongly. I recall a 4th year class where our professor was lecturing about how to construct the perfect portfolio to mirror the market. I put up my hand and asked why we would not try to pick stocks that actually beat the market? The professor immediately replied that this was impossible and told me to re-read the chapter on EMH. I put my hand back-up and asked him how he would explain Warren Buffett’s multi-decade track record of outperformance that is considered impossible according to EMH. He replied, “Who is Warren Buffett”. I later realized this was one of the issues with having a math teacher teach a finance course. Sure, he could teach us how to crunch the numbers, but he was not an investor and would not help me beat the market.

In fact, a good deal of academia and financial education today still tells us you cannot. The system is actually set-up to produce applicants who are well suited to fill the well-oiled machine that is the North American financial system. This was not going to be my path. Once I recognised this, I decided I should pave my own path.

For a different line of thinking I turned to books such as The Intelligent Investor by Benjamin Graham and basically anything about or from Warren Buffett, perhaps the greatest equity investor of all time.

In 1993, the year I graduated high school, Warren Buffett gave an interview that would truly impact the way we conduct research at KeyStone today with a gentlemen by the name of Adam Smith. Alas, while Buffett has been around a long time, in economic circles this was a less famous Adam Smith. In the interview, he was asked if a younger Warren Buffett were coming into the investment field today, what areas would you tell him to point himself in?

“Well, if he were coming in and working with small sums of capital I’d tell him to do exactly what I did 40-odd years ago, which is to learn about every company in the United States that has publicly traded securities and that bank of knowledge will do him or her terrific good over time, Buffett Replied”.

The interviewer Smith chuckled, half surprised at this notion and replied, “But there’s 27,000 public companies (in the country).”

And with a wry smile Buffett replied, “Well, start with the A’s.”

Some years later I read the interview and the quote made a big impression on me. It has helped shape the way we conduct our “discover research” at KeyStone.

Today, you can use digital tools to screen stocks. Select whatever criteria you’d like. 25%+ revenue growth – cash flow positive – PE under 25 – market cap under $500 million and the screener will spit out a bunch of names. So why the heck would we put ourselves through all those annual reports? Because screeners are nowhere near perfect. For the average investors, they are a great start. But, they do not typically remove one-time items that obscure true earnings power, they cannot read an outlook, find you backlog numbers, or interview a management team among other things.

Only by actually looking at the financial statements of 1,000s of public companies can we be sure we are not missing something. Often the real opportunities appear outside of what a typical stock screener or data terminal will provide you.

Small Cap Investing Methodology

Core to our strategy is to start with businesses (small-cap stocks) that have achieved profitability – in most cases they have a history of growing profits. We look for revenue and operational cash flow growth and perhaps most importantly, a viable growth path or multiple paths ahead for the business. Specifically, in reference to small-cap growth stocks, we prefer strong balance sheets with great net cash positions or, at the very least, reasonably manageable debt levels. Businesses that have strong balance sheets can not only weather the inevitable downturns, but profit from them by scooping up assets on the cheap. They are then positioned to post extraordinary growth in boom times. We prefer to buy businesses at a bargain, but often (dependent largely on general market conditions) buy a great business for a reasonable or fair price.

A solid growth path, good profitability, strong balance sheet and reasonable valuations – essentially a variant on GARP or growth at a reasonable price is core to our research philosophy. While core, they are by no means exhaustive.

In fact, we also find a strong management team with skin in the game. Typically, a company that consistently generates strong cash flow and possesses the core criteria we look for above confirms a strong management team – they most often go hand in hand. But, in a perfect world, we also like to see a good management team with significant ownership stake in the business. While it cannot always be the case, we are looking at key management in an ideal small-cap owning between 5 and 40% of the business. If management’s share ownership position is a significant or meaningful percentage of their own personal wealth, their interests are aligned with shareholders and they are more likely to implement dividends, grow dividends, limit dilution, make only cash flow accretive acquisitions and general conduct themselves in a manner which creates shareholder wealth.

There is no substitute for experience as well. I believe an analyst who hasn’t gone through a severe downturn can never be as seasoned or successful long-term than one that has felt this type of pain.

Becoming a good investor is about more than just the numbers. In fact, almost any analyst can run the numbers and study investment theory.  They can read about the effects of a true bear market, but it will not prepare them to experience it in action. There is nothing that can compare to owning a stock and watching it drop 50% in a matter of days. The decision then to sell, hold or buy when the market is irrational and you and your clients are feeling real pain is difficult without experience.

This broad experience in the face of adversity (and adversity faces even the best analysts and the best businesses) translates into how we treat a set-back in a stock in our recommendation universe.

We recently experienced this exact scenario in a stock we recommended in our U.S. Growth Stock research this past year.

In April of 2016 we recommended shares in Applied Optoelectronics Inc. (AAOI:NASDAQ) which makes high-speed transceivers and other components for fiber-optic networking equipment. The stock traded at $15.99 and boasted strong growth from a built out in the hyperscale data centers market by Amazon, Microsoft, and it was looking to add Facebook (now confirmed).

Two days later the company pre-announced a first quarter 2016 earnings warning for the upcoming quarter dropping the stock by around 30% and over the next couple weeks the stock touched the $8.00 range or 50% lower than our recommendation price.

The stock had limited coverage at the time and so the stock languished, but we maintained our rating at hold as we had done extensive research and expected quarterly volatility. The company had stated that it expected to make up for the shortfall in upcoming quarters. By the third quarter, the company had posted a positive earnings surprise and the stock had recovered to $18.00 range where we recommended buying more.

In fact, we have recommended buying the stock all the way to the $65 range this year as the company has now reported 4 consecutive record quarters, having more than made up for that quarterly miss. The stock now trades $100 up over 500% since our original recommendation and is ranked in the top 3 in terms of performance on the NASDAQ in 2017.

It would have been easy and natural to panic and sell the stock following the earnings warning, but we would like to think it is experience that helped us continue to hold and then buy in the face of adversity.

An analyst who is also an investor is a better analyst.

It is what makes Warren Buffett the greatest investor and stock picker. It is key to having the experience and steady hand to do as he famously advised, “Be fearful when others are greedy and greedy when others are fearful”.

As to our approach, we have more of a bottom-up style. We focus on the business, the fundamentals, the valuation, and look for a margin of safety via the value we achieve in a discount purchase, the balance sheet, lack of cyclicality or other unique elements. We read the filings, the presentations, listen to conference calls and related research. We prepare questions and talk to management. We also look at the competition if possible to see how they are performing and get a general idea of the sector.

The macro environment, particularly if there is a direct link to the prosperity of the business is not ignored, but we do not find it prudent or valuable to spend too much time on things that are out of our control. Our time is better spent focusing on learning about the business than trying to predict the direction of interest rates, the price of gold or where we are in the business cycle. Generally, we view one’s broader opinion or the broad consensus opinion on the economy to offer little value in our investment decisions.

I am fond of saying that even if you properly apply our methodology described above but buy just one stock, even if it is our table pounding buy of the year, then you are crazy.

On the flip side, you can rigorously apply our methodology and buy 50 stocks and I will tell you are wasting your time. Sounds like we are not sold on our own criteria. This could not be farther from the truth.

In fact, while we are very confident in the long-term success of our research, as part of a portfolio strategy it is incomplete.

For our clients, our strategy does not stop with our research. We advocate an approach we like to call Focused Diversification. The strategy runs counter to what most investors are told by big bank advisors who place them in multiple ETFs or mutual funds who stress diversification. In fact, we have seen many portfolios which hold up to 50 funds. A portfolio composed as such or which anything more than a couple well diversified funds is essentially going to leave an investor over diversified, over complicated, paying far too many fees and underperforming the index as a result over time.

For an investor that wants a passive strategy we would recommend investing in a couple of low cost, well diversified ETFs or index funds and calling it a day. This would be far easier to manage and you will incur less fees and either mirror or outperform the fund and ETF laden portfolio.

A portfolio consisting of anything greater than 20-25 individual stocks from an assortment of industry and with a global business reach will provide the average investor with all the diversification needed. In fact, there is little benefit of diversification past the range of investments. With most funds holding over 50 stocks, holding a basket of 10 or 20 funds is “diworsification”.

To beat the market, you cannot be the market.

The Anatomy of Great Stock Selection – Boyd Group Income Fund

One of our longest standing BUY recommendations in our portfolio, Boyd Group Income Fund (BYD.UN:TSX), can serve as an excellent example of the type of stock we love to uncover for our clients. It is the type of winner that allows an investor to make other mistakes (and we do) and still produce strong returns in a focused portfolio.  We recommended Boyd in November, 2008 at $2.30 and today it trades in the $95.00 range (it has paid us over $3.00 in dividends) and returned over 4,250%.

For the anatomy of this great stock selection we get into our time machine and set the mood of the market at the time. The year was 2008, the month was November and markets were in panic mode. The credit crisis and market meltdown were in full swing and investors were selling shares indiscriminately – like they were going out of style.

There was definitely blood in the streets, but the carnage was fresh and we had not likely reached full capitulation.

Despite the fact that prices had fallen precipitously and assets appeared on sale there was a lack of recommendations coming forward from Bay Street as analysts and investors were afraid to catch falling knives. From the value investor perspective, we were like kids in a candy store.

Great companies were on sale. And while it tested our stones (trust us it did), we started increasing the frequency and volume of our recommendations at this time. Over the next six-months we recommended in the range of 15 stocks. To give an idea of how rare this is, over the first 7-months of 2017 we have added only two stocks to our Canadian Growth Stock Focus BUY Portfolio.

For our first buy we were looking for a stock with recession resistant qualities. After all, we were in the midst of a potential great recession that was uncharted territory and destined to last for quite some time. We were looking for a simple business that would not easily go away and could potentially grow, even in tough times.

Enter the Boyd Group Income Fund (BYD.UN:TSX). The company was the largest operator of automotive collision repair service centres in Canada and was among the largest multi-site collision repair companies in North America. Recession or not, people tend to fix their vehicles as a means of getting from A to B is often essential in keeping gainful employment.  Despite this, Boyd had basically zero following on Bay Street and the company’s total market cap was in the $25 million range. The company posted revenues in its last quarter alone of over $50 million.

Boyd had recently undergone a turnaround. In fact, since the start of 2007, the company had managed to cut its total debt outstanding in half, reinstate regular cash distributions, increase same store sales, and grow cash flow significantly. Organic growth was solid and the company had embarked on a U.S. acquisition plan that appeared to chart a path towards sustainable long-term growth. The management team owned a significant stake in the business, adding to the appeal.

Partly due to the crisis environment and partly due to its complete lack of analyst coverage (a perfect stock for us), the company was trading with very attractive valuations. The following is an excerpt from our 2008 Buy Report.

“Boyd’s PE multiple based on continued operations is currently south of 4, its price-to-sales is a paltry 0.14, and its EV/EBITDA is 3.32. Based on that, the company’s continued positive outlook, and the fact we like to get paid for holding a security in the current market, we will initiate coverage on Boyd with a BUY recommendation and adding the company to our FOCUS BUY list.”

Monthly distributions and dividends of $0.015 were reinstated commencing December 2007. Shareholder distributions increased to $0.01625 commencing April 2008, subsequently increased to $0.0175 commencing July 2008, increased to $0.01875 commencing October 2008, and finally increased to $0.02 commencing January 2009. At the time, this annualized distribution of $0.24 represented a very conservative annualized payout ratio estimated to be in the 25% range (many funds payout between 80-95%), a sustainable level that allowed for continued balance sheet improvement.

Over the next 9-plus years Boyd has delivered on its growth plans and then some. With each quarterly earnings beat, our comfort level with the management team and company grew. The stock has been recommended at ever increasing prices no less than 25 times in separate reports from KeyStone and it has maintained its position in our Focus BUY Portfolio. It is currently the longest standing buy recommendation.

Again, we recommended Boyd in November 2008 at $2.30 and today it trades at over $95.00 range (it has paid us over $3.00 in dividends) and returned over 4,250%.

Boyd’s market cap has risen from $25 million to $1.75 billion and the company has expanded from roughly 75 locations to 475 locations today. Despite the astonishing rate of growth, the company’s share count has only increased from 12 million to 18 million.

Despite being by far one of the best performing stocks on the entire TSX over the past decade, Reuters only tracks 12 analysts covering the stock. And this is a “surge” from between 0 to 3 analysts over the first 5-years we were recommending the stock.

The lack of coverage outlines the Street’s lack of interest in companies that are not serial share issuers – they just do not make them enough money. This lack of coverage has been a golden opportunity for our clients and produced one of our best recommendation of all time in a stock that is anything but sexy, but produces some of the sexiest returns one can imagine.

By Ryan Irvine, Founder, KeyStone Financial, August, 2017 – 

***

Don’t forget to join the Capital Compounders Club! There’s already 200+ members on Facebook discussing their growth stock ideas in the stock picking competition.

Think Short; Becoming a Skeptical Buyer

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I’ve been investing in stocks for 12 years. I opened a brokerage account in my dorm room at the University of Waterloo in 2005, and have since built a nice portfolio. But it’s certainly not perfect. One of the most important things I’ve learned, and accepted over time, is that I’ll never have a perfect track record, or even close; i.e., ~100% winners. My portfolio will have losers now and in the future.

That being said, I’ve become a much better investor by limiting my blow-ups, whether that’s through not selecting as many future severe under-performers, or promptly selling out of a declining position in my portfolio that’s violated my thesis (i.e., initial reason(s) for buying a stock). So, now I consider myself a perpetually skeptical buyer, meaning that I’m consciously, and decidedly not easily convinced; I have doubts and reservations about the markets, and stocks… all the time. I’m always mindful about why I’m interested in a stock. My interest won’t ever be based on a ‘tip’, emotions, or a ‘hunch’. I conduct my own extensive, independent research on every stock before I initiate a new position in my portfolio. If you’ve read my new book,Capital Compounders, you’ll know that I think only 10% of the Canadian stock market is actually investable, with ~ 50 truly exceptional businesses. The same ratio can apply to the U.S. market, but an even lower one in many international markets, where maybe 5% of stocks are actually “investable”. Indeed, there’s a lot of bad companies, and even more mediocre ones, publicly traded on the stock market. I’m that skeptical.

Since becoming an increasingly “skeptical buyer”, which has come through experience, and many mistakes, I’ve been enthralled with the world of short sellers. People like Marc Cohodes, Carson Block, and Andrew Left who initiate shorts in companies; betting that a stock will fall in price, and then gaining if that scenario plays out in the market. Studying these prominent short sellers has improved my investing success. I employ these short sellers’ shorting frameworks in my own stock selection process by removing stocks from my universe that I’m skeptical about based on many of their short criteria. What remains in my watchlist, and then in my portfolio, are companies/stocks in which I am least skeptical. And that’s really the best I can do because I’ve accepted that ‘I don’t know what I don’t know’. I’ll never know everything at any given time but I can adjust my positions based on new inputs that I learn over time. This is why I concentrate my portfolio in small-cap and mid-cap stocks where I feel I can have an informational edge because of the low analyst coverage and/or institutional ownership in the space.

Now that I’m a more skeptical buyer, before I initiate a new position, I always ask myself, “What can go wrong?” Because, who wants to lose money… And if I do initiate that position, I always make an agreement with myself that I’ll sell out of the position if there’s an violation in my initial thesis. Things change. I can be wrong. But I don’t want to be emotional about it.

Ok, let’s cover one short sellers’ framework that you can use in your own stock selection process to become a more skeptical buyer. I called up Marc Cohodes this summer and cited some points from our discussion in “The Truth is Out There” issue. But that was just about the Canadian housing market in general, where I concluded “something’s gotta give”. So, for this issue, here’s Marc Cohodes’ short selling framework; how he thinks, and selects stocks to short:

“I never, ever, ever get involved in what I would call open-ended situations… I have avoided pie-in-the-sky names. To use an analogy, I’m not interested in climbing into a tree and wrestling the jaguar out of the tree. I’m interested in someone shooting the jaguar out of the tree, and then I will go cut the thing apart once it hits the ground. Instead of open-ended situations, I like to short complete pieces of garbage with fraudulent management and horrifically bad balance sheets. I look for change, I look for ‘if this goes away tomorrow will anyone miss them’?…” To add, Marc usually bets on the jockey, not just the horse, meaning that there’s (unfortunately) rotten managers out there. And he looks for companies that are “frauds, fads, or (impending) failures”, stalks them (Marc calls himself a “stalker”) until they’re weak, and then quickly pounces, initiating a short position; riding the stock down, covering when the time is right, and making money through the process. Again, this thinking can help you in avoiding and/or removing bad stocks from your portfolio. It’s certainly helped me. Always be asking yourself:

– Is management good? Are they honest? Professional?
– Can this company potentially be a fraud (Enron), fad (Heelys), or failure (Blockbuster)?
– Does their product/service have staying power? (i.e., durable competitive advantage)
– Will I know the signs to look for when a company starts to turn for the worse? (especially on the balance sheet, and income statement)
– Do I have the emotional fortitude to pull the sell trigger if I’m wrong?

Becoming a more skeptical buyer isn’t easy. It takes experience and learning from ones mistakes in the market. Being skeptical has certainly improved my investing performance as there’s less ‘blowups’ in my portfolio over time.

Don’t forget to join the Capital Compounders Club! There’s aready 200+ members on Facebook discussing their growth stock ideas in the stock picking competition.

Join the Club!

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I’ve received a lot of reader mail since my book, Market Masters, released worldwide in 2016. And I’ve even met some of you in and around Toronto for coffee at Tim Hortons, Starbucks, and Indigo to talk stocks. It’s really been great to connect with you – passionate DIY investors not just in Canada, but from around the globe – U.S., U.K., India, Israel, and Europe.

Recently I thought, wouldn’t it be interesting if we all got together to talk stocks, and growth investing ideas? To see who else has read Market Masters(or my new book, Capital Compounders)? And to be in touch with like-minded people from around the world? Obviously, we can’t all meetup at a coffee shop. So, I’ve started a new Facebook Group that I would like you to join. Click on this linkand join the Capital Compounders Club. It’s free but exclusive (closed group). However, once you join, you can invite your friends, and family, and post whatever you want – stock/company ideas, videos, new stock buys/sells, articles, investing strategies, etc.

Also, I’m launching exclusive content that will only be available to you in the Capital Compounders Club:

  • Stock Picking Competition (once you join the club, reply to the “Pick a Stock!” post with your top stock – winner will be announced on October 31st)
  • DIY Investor Features (email me at r.speziale@gmail.com if you want to reveal your investing strategies, and I’ll send you a quick profile sheet to fill-out, which I’ll publicly post once complete
  • Live Q&A Sessions with top investors… to be announced soon…
  • Events in and around Toronto (maybe even a pub night)

Join the Capital Compounders Club Now! (If you have Facebook, it’ll take 3 seconds)

Portfolio Update (Q2 – 2017)

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My stock portfolio is up 13.5% year-to-date (January through June), beating the averages; DJIA +8.67%, S&P 500 +8.49%, and S&P/TSX -0.67%.

As many of you know, my portfolio is primarily invested in Canadian and U.S. stocks, based on my investment strategy – Small/Mid-Cap Capital Compounders, Mispriced Large-Caps, and Speculative Takeovers. Learn more about How I Pick Winners.

My Top 10 Performers in Q2 2017 are posted below. As I stated in my Q1 2017 Portfolio Update, I invested more capital into some of those top performers. I also initiated new positions at the beginning of Q2 – Shopify, Winpak, Pollard Banknote, Pinetree Capital, and Boyd Group.

Top 10 Performers Q2 Returns
YUM CHINA 45.0%
NINTENDO 44.1%
TECSYS 39.7%
ALIBABA GROUP 30.6%
SLEEP COUNTRY 27.0%
PINETREE CAPITAL 24.4%
SHOPIFY 24.1%
PACIFIC INSIGHT ELEC 18.4%
MCDONALDS 18.2%
YUM BRANDS 15.4%

Nintendo is a great example of one of my “Mispriced Large-Cap” holdings. Nintendo has always been a video-gaming powerhouse. I’m still a big fan and I’m almost 30. But its stock lost 80% of its value from 2007 to 2015. The Nintendo Wii was a big hit but then Nintendo seemed to just dwindle from there. It started to look like Nintendo could share the same fate as Sega. But then in 2015 Nintendo’s management made several key announcements, with plans to unlock their Intellectual Property (IP) – Nintendo Theme Park at Universal Resorts, Mobile Games (partnership with DeNA), and talks of movies, virtual reality, etc. This was big news in 2015 because Nintendo has always been apprehensive to venture into new markets. That’s why I initiated my position in Nintendo’s stock in 2015. They’ve got a treasure chest of valuable IP, which I would compare to Disney’s; let’s see it continue to go to work! (I’m up 100% on Nintendo since 2015). You can read more about Nintendo’s IP plans here.

You can see my full watchlist / portfolio in my new book, Capital Compounders (email me if you want a free copy). But also note that I’ve added more stocks to my watchlist – Brookfield Infrastructure Partners, Fairfax India, Waste Connections, Mogo Finance Technology, and Jamieson Wellness.

One of my biggest losers in Q2 2017 was Canopy Growth (WEED). It’s down 25% in the quarter. But I’m still long. I started buying shares in WEED at ~$1/share, when it was trading on the Venture Exchange. There’s still a very significant wealth transfer from drug dealers to licensed producers/sellers happening in Canada that I compare to Blockbuster/Netflix…isn’t capitalism great?

Overall, I’m happy with my performance so far this year. But the tide could turn. In Canada, overnight rates may rise for the first time in 7 years, which could be worrisome given our high consumer/mortgage debt load (~$2 trillion), combined with a lofty housing market, which I wrote about in “The Truth is Out There“. I’m not terribly concerned though as my portfolio is not exposed to the financial sector. Most of my holdings are in technology, consumer, and diversified industries. If I’m up +15% for the year (excluding dividends) that’ll be good for me. But even if the market comes down I’ll just buy some stocks on sale as I’ve done before in other corrections, crashes, and bear markets. I’m building wealth for the long term.

How Marc Cohodes Shorts Stocks

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Here’s how Marc Cohodes, veteran short-seller, and the guy who “brought down” Home Capital, shorts companies:

Marc Cohodes:

“I never, ever, ever get involved in what I would call open-ended situations. . . . I have avoided pie-in-the-sky names. To use an analogy, I’m not interested in climbing into a tree and wrestling the jaguar out of the tree. I’m interested in someone shooting the jaguar out of the tree, and then I will go cut the thing apart once it hits the ground. Instead of open-ended situations, I like to short complete pieces of garbage with fraudulent management and horrifically bad balance sheets. I look for change, I look for ‘if this goes away tomorrow will anyone miss them’?….”

In summary, Marc Cohodes looks for companies that are “frauds, fads, or (impending) failures”, stalks them (Marc calls himself a “stalker”) until they’re weak, and then quickly pounces, initiating a short position; riding the stock down, covering when the time is right, and making money through the process.

Learn more investing strategies in my new book, Capital Compounders, on Amazon: http://a.co/3XHhnKe

MarketMasters

Robin Speziale is the national bestselling author of Market Masters, which is available at Chapters, Indigo, and Coles as well as Costco and Amazon.ca. He lives in Toronto, Ontario. Learn more about Market Masters.

The Truth is Out There – Canadian Housing Market; The Numbers, Opposing Views, And Who to Believe?

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I’ll be honest. I don’t know what the heck is going on in the Canadian housing market. Are house prices overvalued? Is this a nationwide bubble or just in pockets? Will the market crash? How severe? And when? I don’t know. So, I thought, why not call the one guy who seems to have the answer – Marc Cohodes (Home Capital’s notorious short seller)…

But before we get to my phone conversation with Marc, at his chicken farm in sunny California, here’s some housing data:

Current Average Prices for DETACHED Houses (April, 2017)-

– Toronto: $1.5 million
– Greater Toronto Area (GTA): $1.2 million
– Vancouver: $1.6 million
– Metro Vancouver Area: $1.5 million

Is this a dream? They’re all MILLION DOLLAR PLUS houses. Pinch me.

Back to reality. Let’s conduct an experiment and use CIBC’s mortgage calculator. Imagine that you’re a young family, new to the market, and want to buy an AVERAGE $1.5 million detached house in Toronto. And we’re not talking about the top of the range (best neighborhood) house. It’s just an “average” house. A 20% down payment on that average $1.5 million house would be $300,000. And so the mortgage amount would be $1,200,000 (= $1,500,000 house price less the $300,000 down payment). Oh, and by the way, CIBC’s online mortgage payment calculator has a limit of $2,000,000 (not kidding – we’re getting so close…).

OK, so we’ll choose the 5 year fixed closed mortgage (4.79% posted rate) with a 25 year amortization period. Then click “submit”… and… we get a whopping $6,837 in monthly mortgage payments. Now, let’s say we’re the average Torontonian family; our average HOUSEHOLD/FAMILY income would be around $75,000. But that’s just “gross” income. We need to subtract federal and provincial income taxes from $75,000, which leaves us with just $60,000 in take-home-pay. Can that “average” income afford an “average” detached house in Toronto? Hell no! Buying a $1.5 million house in Toronto right now would mean forking up $300,000 / 20% down payment (good luck!) and then paying $82,000 in mortgage payments every year for the duration of the mortgage!!! (the actual figures may vary based on differing mortgage loan factors but you get the point). That’s WELL above the average Torontonian family’s cash-on hand / equity (for down payment) and take-home pay ($60,000). Plus, families still need to pay maintenance costs, hydro, as well as eat food, and clothe themselves to survive (no duh)…

Indeed, houses are extremely out of reach for so many people right now, including me. In 2014, I bought a new 600 square-foot condo located in Regent Park, a former “slum” neighborhood east of downtown Toronto that’s being completely re-developed with market condos. I wanted a good deal so that I could affordably enter the Toronto real estate market at the time (remember, I didn’t have a trust fund waiting for me). Daniels’ gentrification is expected to be complete in 2020. Anyway, let’s say that you (the “average young family” in our experiment) give up on buying a house in Toronto. Well, years ago, one could find cheaper housing alternatives in the Greater Toronto Area (GTA). But guess what? “Cheaper” today means $1.2 million in the GTA for a detached house. There goes that alternative. This example is pretty much exactly the same in Vancouver ($1.6 million) and its surrounding housing market ($1.5 million) for detached houses.

So, WHO can actually afford all of these MILLION DOLLAR PLUS detached houses in Canada’s most populated cities (Toronto and Vancouver) and their surrounding regions? What’s going to happen to all of the disenfranchised “average” Canadians who want to buy a house but can’t because they’re priced out of the market? How much foreign capital is ACTUALLY being pumped (laundered?) into the housing market (and what happens when that foreign demand slows)? Are rich foreign students actually using “gifted” money from parents as down payments, with no income of their own in Canada, to obtain mortgage loans at Canadian banks? Do some Canadians have an insatiable drive to “trade up” their house every couple of years? Am I seeing more McMansions sprout up in the newer GTA suburbs? Are Canadian Banks’ underwriting and lending practices really that sound? Have we overextended ourselves in debt (mortgage and consumer – Canadian household credit is above $2 trillion dollars and mortgage debt is 75% of that)? Can house prices go up forever; and does this mean I’m going to live in my 600 square foot condo for the rest of my life? What’s going to happen to all of those real estate agents (including the part-time-agents who have full-time jobs but make client calls during work and then show houses at night)? If I attend one of the many “Get Rich By Investing in Real Estate Seminars” happening in Toronto can I actually get rich? Should I tell my parents to sell their $1 million+ house in Mississauga, cash out, and live like royalty in some warm country? Can the speculators / house flippers sell to a “greater fool” forever? Should I listen to those TV commercials and actually take out a HELOC on my home (because I feel so “house rich”)? Can house prices really rise faster than salaries forever? What happens to the variable rate mortgage holders when the Bank of Canada finally raises the overnight rate? Who’s left holding the bag if/when there is a crash in the Canadian housing market? These are all the questions I’m asking today. Something’s gotta give… or so I think.

These three guys – Marc Cohodes, Hilliard MacBeth, and Carson Block – all think that a Canadian housing crash is coming.

Marc Cohodes

I called Marc last week. He’s the guy who shorted Home Capital. I asked Marc, “What’s going on in the Canadian housing market?” To which Marc replied, “The Toronto, GTA, and Vancouver housing markets will all most likely crash. People there don’t make that much money to sustain a market. Only a small segment of the population makes $200,000+ to actually afford those houses. Remember, housing is shelter. But now Canadians are trading houses like they’re stocks on the Vancouver stock exchange…a big storm is coming”. Scary stuff. So, I then asked Marc, “What should the average Canadian do?”. He replied: “Sell all of your Canadian stocks and convert your cash to USD.” (This isn’t my recommendation to you. It’s just what Marc Cohodes said on the call.)

Hilliard Macbeth

I also contacted Hilliard MacBeth. He’s the guy who wrote the book, “When the Bubble Bursts: Surviving the Canadian Real Estate Crash“. I asked Hilliard via email: “What do you think will finally break the housing market’s back?” To which he responded:

“Regarding the proverbial straw that broke the camel’s back and its timing: These are questions that everyone asks, all the time, going all the way back to my first interview in September, 2014, with The Globe and Mail. Unfortunately, there is no easy and definite answer. In fact, it is impossible to predict what factor or factors will be the catalyst. And, in the end, will it really matter? The exact timing doesn’t matter except to people who are trading houses (or condos) like stocks and trying to squeeze the last drop of profit out of the price gains, with a plan to sell at the exact top? Anyone that is familiar with the real estate’s industry’s lack of liquidity for sellers will recognize immediately that there would only be a few sellers able to complete that difficult task, and those few would need a lot of luck to pull it off.

I conclude in the book that the way to adjust your exposure to real estate is to sell BEFORE the market peak, and before anyone knows that it is the market peak.

Since I can’t successfully predict the timing I prefer to focus on what we know and what we can do: First, it is a bubble, of massive proportions, and all bubbles burst at some point.  Second, the unwinding of the bubble will take years, not months and so people should avoid getting too aggressive trying to buy while the market is falling in the first year or two. Third, there are significant exposures within investments related to real estate, primarily in finance, that many people are very heavily weighted in their investment portfolios. The Canadian banks are the best example of this concentrated bet that investors are not paying enough attention to.” [end quote]

Carson Block

And finally, there’s Carson Block, who like Marc Cohodes, is a successful short-seller. I was just about to contact Carson and get his opinion about the Canadian housing market when news hit Bloomberg: “I’m starting to believe that there could be some real problems with Canada, says Carson Block”. “Particularly given what happened to Home Capital in recent weeks I kind of wonder if Canadian investors are really nervous…”. Carson concluded the interview by warning that “the conditions seem to exist for there to be some pain inflicted on the markets. That suggests that Canada is the hottest market in the world for short sellers; if not, it could be.”

Damn. If the “doom-and-gloom” guys like Marc, Hilliard, and Carson are right then things aren’t so sunny in “sunny ways” Canada. But what about the experts sitting on the other side of the fence – Stephen Poloz, Benjamin Tal, and Evan Siddall? Let’s take a look at their arguments:

Stephen Poloz

In May at the Group of Seven meeting of finance ministers and central bankers in Bari, Italy, Stephen Poloz, Governor of the Bank of Canada, tried to clear up doubt about Canada’s mortgage lending practices, including the crash (“run on the bank”) of Home Capital. “We’d be looking for signs that there are problems with the [financial] system as opposed to preoccupying ourselves with individual institutions…the question would be: What caused this? Is it something unique to the institution itself, or is it something in the system?… I think this situation [Home Capital] is pretty clear on that; it’s idiosyncratic.”

Benjamin Tal

And then also in May of this year, Benjamin Tal, Deputy Chief Economist at Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce (CIBC), said “It’s clear that the Home Capital situation is not the ultimate test of Canadian housing. The situation is contained and the quality of the assets is solid. Any reference to that reality from the [central] bank will carry a lot of weight.”

Evan Siddall

And finally, meeting with reporters at the start of June, Evan Siddall, Chief Executive Officer, CMHC said “We don’t think this is a pervasive problem in Canada…it is a discrete issue…the quality of the portfolio remains quite high. There is no specific concerns really in that portfolio or any part of our business. We have a robust fraud mitigation system in place and it’s working.”

Pheww. This is a lot to take in. And I still don’t know what to think. It’s concerning. Should we listen to the experts? If so, which ones? It’s the “crash and burn” guys vs. the “everything is going to be alright” guys. All I do know is that one side is probably going to be right… time will tell. But for now, “the truth is out there”… somewhere…

What do you think about the Canadian housing market right now?

MarketMasters

Robin Speziale is the national bestselling author of Market Masters, which is available at Chapters, Indigo, and Coles as well as Costco and Amazon.ca. He lives in Toronto, Ontario. Learn more about Market Masters.

My New Book – Capital Compounders

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I am happy to announce my new book – Capital Compounders.

For a limited time (until May 31st), I’m going to make Capital Compounders FREE! Click here: https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/0B9VmITHOukaYVHVQSEtzQlBsejg?usp=sharing

You can learn more on Amazon:

Capital Compounders is a quick-and-easy read on how to get started in the stock market, and make money investing in growth stocks.

Cheers,

Robin Speziale
National Bestselling Author